As expected, on April 5,2002, the Supreme Court of Nigeriaruled UNANIMOUSLY against the 36 States of the federation and in favor of the Federal governmentover who controls offshore resources.However, in the face of aggressive counter-claims of the states, the Federal government -no thanks to late Attorney-General Bola Ige who filed the suit back in February
2001, and who must be smiling broadly in Heaven right now –seems to have bittenmore than it could chew.What it now has is a serious headache, aserious concern overthe fiscal structure of the country as awhole,
but in particular over the 2002 Budget, in which the Federal Governmentnow stands to statutorily lose to the state and local governments as much as N400 billion.

I will attempt to explain.

Let us quickly look at the figures:Nigeria’s approved 2002 budgetpegs expected government revenue at N1.55 trillion (as against the N1.156 trillion earlier proposed by the executive arm of government), N1.312 trillion of which would be due to crude oil earnings (at 1.788million barrels a day,$18 /barrel at budget exchange rate of N112/$) .For our purposes
here,I take roughly N1 trillion (almost 80%)of that N1.312 trillion tobe onshore oil and gas,which would be subject to theminimum of 13% derivation.

Now the Supreme Court has (in effect)ruled that the following FIRST
CHARGES in the 2002 budget are illegal:

Joint Venture Calls –N0.350
trillion.

NNPC Priority Projects –N0.002 trillion

National Judicial Council –N0.028
trillion

External Debt Service –N0.168
trillion

Total-N0.548 trillion

It has also ruled that the 1% FCT deduction is illegal, among a few other rulings.

So what are the implications of all of this?This is what the budget looks
like:

BEFORE THE APRIL 5 SUPREME COURTRULING(all in trillions):

Total RevenueN1.55

Less First Charges:N0.548

RemainderN1.002

Of Remainder (for simplicity, we will ignore the VAT pool percentages):

48.5% to the Federal Govt.N0.485

24% to the StatesN0.240

20% to the Local GovernmentsN0.200

7.5% distributed as follows:

1% to FCTN0.01

1% for DerivationN0.01

2% Ecological FundN0.02

3% OmpadecN0.03

0.5% Stabilization:N0.005

Summary:

Total Under Federal ControlN1.11(for its use and for distribution as it seesfit)

Total to the States (statuory)N0.240

Total to Local Governments (st.)N0.200

TotalN1.55

Note:

Total State +Local Govt.N0.440

Some Ratios of Allocations:

(State+Local) / Federal0.40

Local/State0.83

Derivation/(State + Local)0.02

AFTER THE APRIL 5SUPREME COURT
RULING (all in trillion)

Total RevenueN1.55

Less Minimum 13% Derivation -N0.130[Goes to the Statesstatutorily]

RemainderN1.42

Of Remainder (for simplicity, we will ignore the VATpool percentages):

If you inspect the two Before- and After-Supreme Court rulingbudgets
above, the shift of fiscal control from the federal government to the state and local governments is quite significant, and requires the federal government to fundamentally restructure its responsibilities since it couldlose up to N400 billion from under its control.So there is panic, understandable panic by the Federal government of president Obasanjo and Na’Abba/ Anyim who now
wonder how they will no fundtheir travels, their salaries and allowances, that Abuja stadium, all in thiselection year, etc.For example, one report had the president saying:

The Federal Government yesterday
appointed Secretary to the Government of the Federation (SGF), Chief Ufot Ekaette, to head a five-man committee to thoroughly study the implications of Friday's judgment of the Supreme Court on on-shore/off-shore suit.

Also, the National Assembly will today
hold a joint session to discuss the Supreme Court judgment and the parlous state of the economy, among others. The Supreme Court had last Friday fundamentally restructured the Federation Account while delivering judgment in a suit instituted by the Federal Government against the 36 states of the federation for the determination of the seaward boundary of a littoral state within the country. Information and National Orientation Minister, Professor Jerry Gana who announced the
membership of the committee after the Federal Executive Council (FEC) meeting named other members as the Attorney General of the Federation, Kanu Agabi, SAN, Minister of Finance, Mallam Adamu Ciroma and two other persons whose name he failed to disclose. Gana added that the committee's term of reference is to "look into the interpretation of the ruling or judgement with a view to bringing the findings to the attention of the Federal Executive Council (FEC)."

Gana allayed the fears that the judgment
of the Supreme Court, will affect the details, figures and implementation of the 2002 budget, which the president has signed into law. He explained that given the briefing Ciroma gave the president, "there is not going to be fundamental changes. In other words, the budget is not going to be fundamentally affected." Gana noted that contrary to public impression, President Olusegun Obasanjo had signed the Appropriation Bill into law "the same day it was presented
to him."Although Obasanjo had said he would not be able to implement the budget as passed, the Federal Executive Council, yesterday advised all ministries to effectively implement the 2002 budget and ensure the due process of contract award and payments is followed. It was, however, gathered that the details and breakdown of the budget has not been sent to the president from the
National Assembly…….

UNQUOTE

Yet a third report stated thatthe president was suspending the application
of the revenue allocation formula – including that“gentleman’s agreement magic figure” of 13%of “naturalresources”- pending action by the Revenue Mobilization Allocation and Fiscal Commission .This is becausethe Supreme Court ruling said
that the presently applied stipulation was first in violation of existing law (Babangida’s Cap. 16 (as mended by Decree 106 of 1992;“1% of mineral resources”), which is itself INCONSISTENT with the Constitution (which merely stipulates A MINIMUM of 13% of natural resources)Although the president was empowered to do so, by law, to simply order alteration of Cap. 16 to bring it
into conformity with the 1999 Constitution, he had not done so in all the time he had been president.“A minimum of 13%” is not aspecification, rather it is discretionary, so neither the States or the Supreme Court or the States could use it as a basis to ask for or grant reliefto counter-claiming states until and unless the president
and/or the RMAFC acts.

A completemess!

2.HISTORY OF NIGERIA’S
PROBLEMATIC FISCAL FEDERALISM

One of the many problems bedeviling the Federal Republic of Nigeria is that the description“federal”isin name only – rather than in deed and intruth.Due to incursion of military rule in 1966, and the unitary proclivities of such a rule,our delicately negotiated federal constitution
has been bastardized and bent out of shape.

No where is that assertionmore clear than in our current revenue
allocation formula, where since 1970, the federal government has been playing “musical chairs”with the lower levels ofstate and local government over distribution of thetotal collected revenue: it has often been a case of “now you see it, now you don’t.” [See Table 1.]The
irony is that various federal documents indicate that the government anda number of its top functionariesarekeenly aware of the various defectsandthe resulting lack of development that the republic has faced from this bad situation.For example, in January 1993, in a paper titled “Revenue Sharing and the Political Economy of Nigerian Federalism”, General TY Danjuma, present Federal Minister of Defence, former Chief of Army Staff ofthe Federal Military Government of Nigeria (1975-1979)and writing as thethen-current chairman of
the National Revenue Mobilisation, Allocation and Fiscal Commission (NRMAFC), stated viz (See Reference 1)::

QUOTE

Currently, Nigeria operates a federal
political economy implying a series of legal and administrative relationships established among levels of government possessing varying degrees of real authority and jurisdictional autonomy.Within a period of 34 years of its corporate existence as a nation, the Nigerian federal system has metamorphosed from a two-tiered federal arrangement initially comprising three unequal political and administrative regions to a three tiered
federal system of 30 states, one Federal Capital Territory and 589 Local Governments each of which is constitutionally recognised.Between 1962 and 1992, for instance, the Federal system comprised 3 Regions (1960), 4 Regions (1963), 12 States (1967), 19 States (1976), 21 States (1987) and since 1991, 30 States.The Local Governments have alsoincreased from 299 in 1970 to 301 (1979); and then to 781 (1981) before they reverted again to 301 (1984) and increased first to 449 (1987), 500 (1991) and to 589.As can be seen….the Constituent units in the Nigerian federation had been tinkered with eleven times either at the State or Local Government level.Withthe increasing number of units, and, with what there is to be shared not varying much, greater pressure is put on available resources;hence the “national cake” is fragmented among many units.With such fragmentation, no unit gets fully satisfied at the end of the day.

The Federal government in its attempt to
provide some public services nationwide often assumes more responsibilities than would ordinarily be the case under the Federal Constitution.Examples of these include provision of accommodation, mass transit, bore holes for water supply, roads, etc.Inevitably, the functional responsibilities outweigh the available financial resources in line with statutory allocation from the
Federation Accounts under the suspended constitutions.Hence ad-hoc policy measures are adopted by the Federal Government transferring federally-collected revenue to itself and effectively neutralizing the statutory allocation formula.These ad-hoc measures include the use of Dedication Accounts, Stabilization Funds, Petroleum (Special) Trust Fund and AFEM intervention Surplus, which
substantially reduce the statuary allocations that are received by state and local governments……..The overall impact is that fiscal federalism in Nigeria has not been able to contribute optimally to social and economic development.Despite the considerable increase in the number of administrative units, real economic growth has been low and the per capita income has declined considerably from the level attained in the 1980s.As the nation moves into another era of democracy under a federal constitution, there is need to critically review the division of functions among the various tiers of governments as well as the revenue sharing arrangement in order to substantially improve the delivery of public goods and services as well as promote real economic growth.

UNQUOTE

In another CBN report, the apex bank unveiledsome standard laments

QUOTE

CBN Annual Report Year Ended 31st December 1996,Box 4.1
“Improving the Revenue Generating Capacity of the Three Tiers of Government”, page 72-73.

The need for adequacy of revenue at the
three levels of government – Federal, state and local becomes critical, given their expenditure programs aimed at influencing the levels of income, savings, production and distribution for the ultimate goals of achieving equity and increasing prosperity…The size of revenue that government generates at any point in time is influenced by its resource endowment, level of economic activities and the efficiency of its revenue collection machinery.The stability and growth of revenue is a function of the ability of government to stimulate and sustain a high level of economic activities and an optimal mix of revenue-generating instruments.The foregoing analysis shows that, although revenue accruing to the governments over time has increased in absolute terms, their revenue profile has depend largely on statutory allocations while the
performance of internally-generated revenue has remained unsatisfactory. Prior to the introduction of FAT, the three tiers of government relied heavily on their share of Federation Account which in turn depended on developments in the international petroleum market.This had implications for government finances.Thus, government revenue had been unstable, showing up in deficits and poor
delivery of services with expenditures concentrated on recurrent activities in the case of State and local governments.This explains the use of tax contractors by some State Governments and introduction of various kinds of levies by State and Local Governments toimprove their revenue standing.It is therefore important that advantage is
taken of the country’s resource endowments to enhance the revenue potential and raise the level oftotal federally-collected revenue with the ultimate aim of improving revenue accruable to Federal, Stateand Local Governments through statutory allocations.Apart from petroleum, there are other mineral products that have remained untapped.

UNQUOTE

The last statement is obviously one of exasperation – “Heck, we have other resources, don’t we?” – and was
the greatest understatement of the1996 CBNreport.Nigeria’s proliferation ofunproductive, money-sinking administrative units, combined with itsmonocultural dependence on oil make us into nothing more thanan oil-selling company masquerading as
a country, with a president (and “Commander-in-Chief of the Armed Forces”)beingthe “armed” managing director of the badly- managed company.The stategovernors then act as company division chiefs distributing“dividends of democracy”to citizens masquerading as indolent company workers, with local government chairmen acting as subalterns.

Even without a penny stolen from our oil sales – and that is impossible to imagine -to depend almost solely on 2 million barrels of oil per day sold at even $27per barrel (the latest price in the face of new Middle East tensions)translatesto roughly$0.50 per person per day in Nigeria.When
you take away production costs and company-profit taking,that readily drops to $0.25 per day.

In short, we are an oil-rich country.However,based onour needs,we are not a rich country.

3.THE MATHEMATICS OF A MONOCULTURAL REVENUE ALLOCATION

Nevertheless,no matter the situation,what is there to be allocated must still be allocated fairly between

the three tiers of government.With Nigeria’s monocultural
“kalokalo” economy, that should be simple enough, if only we would apply some mathematics.

So we will adopta simple approach without hiding monies here and there.

Suppose in a particular year,the total federally-collected revenue is X
billion Naira, out of which a percentage of100y% is from derivation-deservingsources – that isPstates out of a total of T states contribute to the derivation pool an amount D (=Xy).Next suppose that by law it has been determined toallocate 100z%from the derivation poolto the worthy P states.Next assume that by law whatever is not distributedby derivation is then distributed to the Federal government, State Government and Local Governmentsrespectively
in the ratio100f%:100s%:100(1-s-f)%. .Now let G be the totalnumber oflocal governments in the countryand N the number of local governments in the P derivation-deserving states.

ThenI submit that givenG, P,
T and y,the determination ofz, s and f – that is the Revenue Allocation Formula – should be based on what our financial and fiscal planners want the following quantities FR,RSGF, RGS and RNO to be for a united, efficient, just, united and hencehappy federationto exist:

(i)FR- theresponsibility of the Federal Governmentie

FR = X(1-yz)f

This determines how “big” we want the federal government to be relative to our revenue base and the constitutional
responsibilities. This formula can also be considered as a formula for calculating f once FR, X, y and z have been determined:

This reflects how “big”or “small” the federal government is
relative to the lower levels – ie a measure of its fiscal devolution from federal to lower levels of governance.

(iii) RGS – ratio of the totalallocation to all of the local governments
relative to all the state governments.

RGS = {(1-yz)(1-s-f)}/{yz + (1-yz)s}

This reflects how “big” or “small” the state governments are in aggregate relative to the local governments –
ie a measure of fiscal devolution from states to local governments.

(iv) RNO -ratio of total allocation to non-derivation-worthystates+LGsto that of the P derivation-worthy states.

RNO ={1-yz)s(T-P)/T + (1-yz)(1-s-f) (G-N)/G

-----------------------------------------------

yz+ (1-yz)sP/T+ (1-yz)(1-s-f)N/G

This third ratio is an important one:it measures the level of imbalance
between the states that are resourceful to those that are not.At the same time, it enablesthe resource-rich states to have a sense of whether theyare being unjustifiably milked or not.

A critical inspection of these ratios will show that for consistent fiscal devolution,

RSGF~RGS

That is the states should devolve to the local government to the same extent as the federal devolves to the states.

Furthermore, for a balance between equity among states and fairness to the resource-rich states, we shouldrequire that:

(1-y)/y<RNO < (T-P)/Pif (T-P)/P > (1-y)/y

or RNO > larger of
(1-y)/y and (T-P)

A quick historical note here:Prof. Ojetunji Aboyade, back in 1977,duringGeneral Obasanjo’s regime,once gave some mathematical reasonings to his Revenue Allocation Technical Review Committees
suggestion.I do not know whether they were some of these same considerations.Anyway, Aboyade’s mathematicswere thendismissed by Shehu Shagari as being “too technical” , while Okigbo stated they were rather “fine…but without political context”.Aboyade’s report was promptly rejectedwhen Shagari became president in 1979.Some other critics described Aboyade’s formulae as “probably a device to deceive the citizens under the cover of being intellectually sophisticated.”[For more details, please see historical notes of
Table 1 below .]

4.THE PRESENT NIGERIAN SITUATION

Let us now particularize our work to the Nigerian monocultural economy, where roughly80% of our income comes from oil in 9 oil-producing states out of 36, which have between them 185 local governments.

That is:

P = 9;G = 185;T = 36
andy = 0.8

Ie0.25 < .RNO< 3

Our computations of various ratios forvarious values of z, f and s are
given in Table 2.We see that only when we have a40:20:40 or 40:30:30split for lower values of z do we get anywhere near the compromise values ofRSGF, RGS and RNO outlined above.

5.MY TWO SUGGESTIONSFORNEW IMPROVED REVENUEALLOCATION FORMULAS

I believe that we should fix the derivation equation once and for all at
13%.Then,I make the following suggestions:

SUGGESTIONSET 1

Take the entire totally collectedrevenue
(X) and remove the 13%of derivation pool D and distributethattothe state andlocal governments, and consider dividing the rest as follows byone of the following stipulations:

(i)Federal Government:50%; State Government:25%Local Government:25%; divide 0.13 D equally toState and Local Government

(ii)Federal Government:36%State Government: 28% Local Government:36%; add 0.13D to State Government

(iii)Federal Government:36%State Government: 36% Local Government: 28%; add 0.13D to Local Government.This is a flip of (ii) between the state and local governments.

The relative percentages would be a function of D/X and will vary in only quite a narrow band.ForD/X = 0 (no derivation fund), andD/X= 1 (all available funds are by derivation),then the overall percentages are:

Ratios:

D/X
= 050:25:2536:28:36

D/X
= 143.5:28.25:28:2531.32:37.36:31.32

Swing:6.5 – 3.25 – 3.254.68 – 9.36 – 4.68

It is as simple as that, and would be a good political compromise, and will not lead to too much shock in the system as
D/Xmoves up or down, in which case Choice (i) is better than (ii) and (iii) are better.

Theclaim here is that the recent full pronouncement of Nigeria’sSupreme Courton littoral states’ (non) resource control DEMANDS that our countryNigeria NOWsimplify itsrevenue allocation formula in orderto establish accountability and transparency, and yet satisfy
the Constitution. ThusI am recommending we do indeed“KeepIt Simple….!”

My preferred recommendation here? After
dividing 13% of the derivation fund equally among state and local governments,let Federal Government have 40%and theState + Local have60% of the remainder.Then, in a spirit of true federalism and devolution of power, letthe Constitution merely specify thatno tier getlower than 20% .Each state then determines its own ratio between State and Local Government(to add up to 60%) based on its own peculiar circumstances.

SUGGESTION 2

Based on the analysis in Section 3 as well as political realities,I
am however now prepared to make an alternativesuggestion for new revenue allocation which considers three different revenuepots and applies different percentages to the different pots. This will be seen to be a more complexvariation on Suggestion 1, but an important one.

Here it is:

1.We collect ALL federal government monies into threepots:

(i)Federation (Onshore Natural Resources + VAT Income) Account. – we distribute this among the various states according to certain formulas consistent with 13% derivation.

(ii)Federation (Offshore Natural Resources Income) Account.We distribute this among the various tiers of government according to certain formulas (no derivation consideration)

State Governments-20%[X%distributed horizontally to States by Derivation]

Local Governments-40%[Y%distributed horizontally to LGs by Derivation]

Total- 100%

Yet-to-be determined X% and Y%of the state and local government components
respectivelywould be distributed HORIZONTALLY to these tiers by derivationsuch that overall derivation follows constitutional mandate minimum of 13%:

4.Whatever is distributed to the states and local government other than by derivation should be STRICTLY and ONLY on the basis of equality (considerations of population, population density, land mass, terrain can each be nominally set at 0.0025%each (to satisfy present constitution)and put in escrow!):

(i)To States, based on thirty-six of them.

(ii)To local governments, based on 768 (excludes FCT councils)of them;

(iii)if states additional to the 36 are created,re-distribution of funds must be within each political zone as if there were 36 states;

(iv)if local governments additionalto 768are created, re-distribution of funds within each state as if there were the present number of LGs within each statesas of May 29, 1999.

Conditions (iii) and (iv) areto discourage
proliferation of states purely for financial reasons.

5.2002 BUDGETS AFTER SECONDREVENUE ALLOCATION SUGGESTION

(All in trillions)

Total RevenueN1.55

Of which:

Onshore ResourcesN1.00

Offshore ResourcesN0.32

Non-OilResourcesN0.23

Totalto the Federal Govt. N 0.79(=0.40+0.16+0.23)

Totalto the StatesN 0.296(=
0.20 +0.096)

Total to the Local GovernmentsN0.464(= 0.40 + 0.064)

TotalN1.550

Note:

13% Derivation -N0.130[Goes to Local Govts. statutorily]

Total Min to State + LocalN0.76

Overall Percentages:

Federal Government:51%

State Government:19%

Local Government:30%

In effect,this is an overall 50:20:30 split for this particular
budget.

7.EPILOGUE:

I have outlined above what I believed arereasoned approachesfor a new and simplifiedrevenue allocation formula in our country.Clearly, political jostlings and constitutional reform must stilltake place before it can be fully enacted.The fundamental notion is that the Federal
government must “right size” itself by defining its “minimum responsibility” , work within the reality oftheweakrevenue base of the country,and at the same time understandthat the states and local governments also have their own minimum
responsibilities which they too must not shirk.Then and only then will any revenue allocation formula make sense.

Finally, despite my besteffort here at revisingour messyrevenue allocation formula, on the long run,there is no alternative to moving away from ourcenter-controlled,oil-dominated monoculture,which oil
contributes almost 80% of our federal government revenues, 90-95%of our export earnings, 80-90% of our foreign exchange earnings,and yet contributes only about 20%to our GDP.We must also re-writeour 1999 Constitution – via a Sovereign National
Conference because the changes have to be quite fundamental, as the Supreme Court ruling suggests- to give (among other things)more personal income and business-profit taxing powers to the states andlocal government.De-emphazing population in revenue allocation will also mean that
our census might become reliable for once,makingplanning for development more effective.

1.“Federalism and Nation-Building in Nigeria: The Challenges of the 21st Century”,Edited by J.I. Elaigwu, P.C. Logams and H.S. Galadima, National Council on Intergovernmental Relations (NCIR),Abuja (1994)

*Table 1 shows the history of revenue allocation formulas since 1977, and includes the latest proposed revenue allocation formula by the Federal Revenue Mobilization and Fiscal Allocation Committee, and a summary of my own proposal.The FRMAFCA proposalis yet to be fully debated and
signed into law,but with the recent Supreme Court ruling, it will now have to besent back tothat committee back – back to the drawing board.

***The formula is applied after ONLY derivation funds have been removed as first charge

TABLE 2:CALCULATION OF VARIOUS REVENUE ALLOCATION RATIOS

For z = 0.13 (13%allocated by derivation)

RSGFRGS RNO

fs(1-s-f) (in %)

(1)60 –30 – 100.8600.2401.401

(2)60 -20 – 200.8600.6331.413

(3)60 – 10 – 300.8601.3881.425

(4)50 -30 – 201.2320.4811.579

(5)50 – 25 – 251.2320.6831.585

(6)50 – 20 – 301.2320.9491.591

(7)40 –40 – 201.7900.3881.714

(8)40-30 – 301.7900.7211.725

(9)40 -20 - 40
1.7901.2661.736

For z = 0.25 (25%allocated by derivation)

RSGFRGS RNO

fs(1-s-f) (in %)

(1)60 –30 – 101.0830.1820.863

(2)60 -20 – 201.0830.4440.869

(3)60 – 10 – 301.0830.8570.875

(4)50 -30 – 201.5000.3641.012

(5)50 – 25 – 251.5000.5001.015

(6)50 – 20 – 301.5000.6671.018

(7)40 –40 – 202.1250.3081.137

(8)40- 30 – 302.1250.5451.143

(9)40 -20 - 40 2.1250.8891.149

For z = 0.50 (50%allocated by derivation)

RSGFRGS RNO

fs(1-s-f) (in %)

(1)60 –30 – 101.7780.1030.393

(2)60 -20 – 201.7780.2310.395

(3)60 – 10 – 301.7780.3910.397

(4)50 -30 – 202.3330.2070.478

(5)50 – 25 – 252.3330.2730.479

(6)50 – 20 – 302.3330.3460.480

(7)40 –40 – 203.1670.1880.555

(8)40-30 – 303.1670.3100.557

(9)40 -20 - 40 3.1670.4620.559

APPENDIX I:

Historical notes on Table 1:

HISTORY OF REVENUE ALLOCATIONFORMULASIN NIGERIA – PAST, PRESENT AND PROPOSED

Since the 1946 Richardson Constitution which granted internal autonomy to the then-existing three Regions, there have
been several attempts to provide equitable revenue allocation formulas consistent with the sharing ofresponsibilities between the Federal and regional/state governments.These include

Aboyade was still Vice-Chancellor in Ife when, in 1977, the Obasanjo government appointed him Chairman, Technical Committee on Revenue Allocation……

When the [ABOYADE] committee finished its job, the Obasanjo government received its report.Among other technical details, the Committee set up parameters and models for administrative and fiscal controls which no effort in the past ever worked out.It recommended that all federally-collected revenue (except personal income tax of the Armed Forces, External Affairs Officers and the Federal Capital Territory) should be consolidated into the State Joint Account.This would then be shared [VERTICALLY] by the Federal, States and Local Government using 57:30:10 percentages respectively.In
addition, it created special grants accounts [3 PERCENT ALLOCATIONWITHOUT SPECIFIC CATEGORIES] to cater forproblems like general national ecological degradation, national emergencies, disasters, oil pollution and the like.

Each state was also to contribute 10 percent of its total revenue receipts to the share of its constituent local government from its total revenue.The Committee recommended the establishment of a joint fiscal and planning commission to periodically review
federal fiscal system, while it added a set of new criteria for [HORIZONTAL] allocation [ie OF THE 30%SHARE TO THE STATES]:equality ofaccess to development [25%]; national minimum standards for national integration [22%]; absorptive capacity of the national and state economy [20%]; independent revenue and minimum tax effort [18%] and fiscal
efficiency [15%].The government then sent the report to the Joint Planning Board (JPB) where state governments worked on it.The draft was finally fine-tuned by the Federal Government which adopted and implemented it.

A number of Federal constituencies that were dissatisfied with the policy unleashed a spate of criticisms.Some people felt that “need” was not adequately taken care of.These people were mostly from eastern
Nigeria.The Northern elite felt that “population” was not given its deserved place.Some areas that were not populous but which had a large geographical space and land area felt the report did not give enough attention to “physical area.”Some, mainly minorities in the oil producing areas, argued that the treatment given to
“derivation principle” was faulty.They felt that oil was dominant and important and that if the members of the committee had been from oil producing areas, they would have given derivation a greater percentage.Others felt that if the Committee’s principles of allocation as established in its report and the White paper were good and defensible, the numbers could be questioned.

Those who were more technically minded, Dr. Pius Okigbo being the strongest, felt that the method of translating principles to money was too complicated, hence the succeeding government of Shagari’s conclusion that Aboyade’s report“was too technical”
as reported in the national newspapers.In a sense, this may have some foundation.In the report one finds mathematical expansions like the ratio of this and the inverse of that other ratio, and calculus like this weight when pushed to this side gives the coefficient of that.It was truly a technical report and, therefore, required to be
simplified so that it could be easily intelligible to the average civil servant and commentator.The critics of the report felt that it was possible to have a formula which would involve less mathematical calisthenics.Some of them argued that Aboyade’s formulae were probably a device to deceive the citizens under the cover of being intellectually sophisticated……

The first major criticism against the Committee’s report, however, was the stricture rendered on the floor of the Constituent Assembly in 1978 by Dr. Pius Okigbo.Okigbo criticised the method and the logic of the report.Alhaji Shehu Shagari labelled the report as “too technical.”Thus, when Shagari became President of the country in 1979, it was only to be expected that the report would be subjected to further review.

The Presidential Commission on Revenue Allocation, popularly known as the Okigbo Commission, was inaugurated on 23 November, 1979…..The Commission embarked on a tour of the states in the months of January to March 1980…..The Committee submitted its report on 30 June 1980 and the Federal Government’s White Paper on the report was released on 1 September 1980.Given the lack of interest of the State governments in revenue collection, it should not come as a surprise that the Commission’s treatment of the problem of revenue generation did not give rise to any disagreement.For instance, theCommission argued that the produce sales tax [which used to be leviedand collected by the regional governments before it was abolished by the military in the wake of the oil boom] should be vested in the National Assembly.This argument was meekly accepted by the states, even when they allknew that produce tax constituted a veritable source of independent revenue.Also, the commission’s recommendation that companies income tax should be collected by the Federal Government was accepted by the states.On this count, the states had acquiesced in the commission’s rejection of the suggestion earlier made by some state governments
that their internal revenue departments be allowed to assess and collect companies income tax from companies based in their states, and that companies in which the state government had controlling equity shares should be given tax concessions .In short, the states did not gain additional sources of revenue from the Okigbo commission; and they did not seem to mind the fact that, by not being able to generate substantial revenue
locally, they thus depended totally on Federally collected revenue.Therefore, rather than raise all the dust on the allocation to tax jurisdiction, the politicians and other interested parties felt concerned and agitated over the sharing of what was Federally collected.

The Commission’s recommendation on the sharing of the Federation Account was as follows:53% to the Federal Government;30% to the State Governments; 10% to the Local Governments; and 7%as Special Fund which is also to be distributed as follows:2.5%for the initial development of the Federal Capital Territory; 2%for special problems of the mineral producing areas; 1% for other ecological problems such as soil erosion, desert encroachment, flood control, etc., 1.5% for the revenue
equalization fund.

[Footnotes:1. Page 40“There were three reports:a majority report, and two minority reports;one by Dr. Leton, who
wrote on behalf of the oil-producing states, and the other by Dr. Phillips who was criticised as having “repeated the stand of the UPN [UNITY PARTY OF NIGERIA OF AWOLOWO]”.2.Page 41: “As could be expected, bearing in mind the emphasis of the Shagari administration on Abuja, the Federal Government rejected the minority submissions of Dr. Phillips that the FCT should
not be treated separately in the sharing of the Federation Account.”]

It was clear that these were provocative and unacceptable recommendations.Opposition to them began with the Federal Government’s White Paper which proposed an amendment to the National Assembly seeking to increase the Federal Government’s share from 53% to
55%.The proposal still leaves the states with 30%, but lowered the Local Government’s share to 8%.The Special Fund, which was left at 7%, receive a new disbursement formula from the Federal Government’s White Paper:3.5% to the mineral-producing states, to be shared on the basis of derivation, 2.5% to the Federal Capital Territory, and
1% for continuing ecological problems.Of the 3.5% meant for the mineral producing states 2% should be allocated directly while the remaining 1.5% should be managed by a special agency for the development of mineral-producing areas……

An intense political crisis followed the report….By the last months of 1980, it was clear that the {SHAGARI] executive arm of the Federal Government had bungled the revenue allocation issue.It had set aside the recommendation of the commission it
appointment, and had made even more absurd suggestions….

Petty political bickerings, alliances, accords, divisions, lobbying characterized the debates, and by February 1981 a stalemate had been reached.The House of Representatives and the Senate could not agree on the points and extent of amending the Bill.On 9 December 1980, the House of Representatives had passed the Bill with the following amendments:50% of the Federation Account to the Federal Government;40% to the States, and 10% to the Local Governments.On 14 January 1981, the Senate passed the Bill with the following amendments:58.5% to the Federal Government, 31.5% to the States and 10% to the Local Government.The following day, the SJA (State Joints Account) suffered another set-back in the Senate as it was decided that the 5% allocated to the oil-producing states should come from the states share.This meant that the states were really to share 26.5%.The Senate also decided that the funds in the SJA be disbursed as follows:50% according to the principle of equality;40% according to population, and 10% by “land use area.”…….

With these points of disagreement between the House of Representatives and the Senate, it was decided that the Bill be referred to the Joint Finance Committee [JFC] for reconciliation.The JFC endorsed [ON JANUARY 29, 1981]the amendments made by the Senate, and on February 3, 1981, the President signed the Bill into law…….by March 1981, either jointly or severally,no less than twelve states had taken the revenue allocation bill to court, demanding its nullification.Some filed their cases at the Supreme Court, others went to the lower courts.By
April 1981, seven such cases had been filed by state governments in the Supreme Court, seeking similar ends.Thus, on 21 April 1981, the court decided that all suits would be heard at the same time, and that Bendel State suit would be taken as a test case…..

The states were not disappointed.Bendel State won the case.In its ruling [ON OCTOBER 2, 1981], the Supreme Court declared the Revenue Allocation Act of 1981 unconstitutional, illegal, null and void, and directed
all Federal and State government officials to refrain from allocating Federal revenue according to the provisions of that Act…………

By December 1981, all the parties concerned seemed to have learnt their lessons……It was perhaps this lesson of caution that informed President Shagari’s new Bill sent to the National Assembly in December 1981, as well as the debates on the Bill in the Assembly.The
House of Representatives proposed no amendments, and those proposed by the Senate were thrown out by the JFC which met under the chairmanship of Senator Ameh Ebute on 17 December 1981.The state bourgeoisie remained silent on the bill and the Act, eventually signed by the President, was used in allocating revenues in 1982 and the remainder of the life of the Second Republic.

Here is a summary of the adopted formula:55% to the Federal Government; 35% to the State Governments and 10% to the Local Governments.The SJA was to be sub-divided as follows:30.5%to all the states,
1% to be paid into a special fund to be administered by the Federal Government for the amelioration of ecological problems in any part of Nigeria, and 3.5% to be shared on the basis states directly and by derivation, and 1.5% should be paid into a special fund to be administered by the Federal Government for the development of the mineral producing areas.The funds in the SJA [30.5%] was to be shared accordingto the following principles:equality of states [40%], population [40%], social development factor [15%;MADE UP OF:DIRECT PRIMARY SCHOOL ENROLLMENT – 11.25%; INVERSE ENROLLMENT – 3.75%], internal revenue effort [5%].

1. Plaintiff's case succeeds and I hereby determine and declare that the seaward boundary of a littoral State within the Federal Republic of Nigeria for the purpose of calculating the amount of revenue accruing to the Federation Account directly from any natural resources derived from that State pursuant to Section 162(2) of the Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria 1999, is the low-water mark of the land surface thereof or (if the case so requires as in the Cross
River State with an archipelago of islands) the seaward limits of inland waters within the State.
…

3. The 6th Defendant succeeds in his claim (a) and, accordingly, I determine and declare
that the Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria 1999 having come into force on 29/5/999, the principle of derivation under the proviso to Section 162(2) of the Constitution came into operation on the same day -- that is to say, 29/5/99 and Plaintiff is obliged to comply therewith from that date.

His claims (b) and (e) are, however, struck-out while his claims (c) and (d) are dismissed.
…….

6. Claims (a), (b), (c) and (d) of the 10th Defendant's counterclaim are hereby dismissed; claims (e) and (g) are, however, struck out. The 10th Defendant succeeds on his claims (f) and (h). It is hereby declared that the underlisted policies and/or practices of the plaintiff are unconstitutional, being in conflict with the 1999 Constitution, that is to say:

(i) Exclusion of natural gas as constituent of derivation for the purposes of the proviso to section 162(2) of the 1999 Constitution.

(ii) Non payment of the shares of the 10th Defendant in respect of proceeds from capital gains taxation and stamp duties.

(iii) Funding of the judiciary was a first line charge on the Federation Account.

(iv) Servicing of external debts via first line charge on the Federation Account.

(v) Funding of Joint Venture Contracts and the Nigeria National petroleum Corporation (NNPC) Priority Projects as first line charge on the Federation Account.

(vi) Unilaterally allocating 1 per cent of the revenue accruing to the Federation Account to the Federal Capital Territory.

I also grant an injunction restraining the Plaintiff from further violating the Constitution inn the manner declared in claim (f) above.
……